Aikane | |
Director: | Daniel Sousa, Dean Hamer, Joe Wilson |
Producer: | Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu, Daniel Karslake, Judith Light |
Music: | Dan Golden |
Studio: | Qwaves in association with Kanaka Pakipika |
Runtime: | 14 minutes |
Country: | Hawai'i (USA) |
Aikāne is a 2023 animated short film based on a mythical love and adventure story rooted in the Hawaiian tradition of aikāne, or intimate partners of the same sex. The film is directed by Daniel Sousa, Dean Hamer, and Joe Wilson, produced by Kumu Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu, and executive produced by Judith Light and Daniel Karslake.[1] [2] [3] It premiered at the Animayo and Seattle International Film Festivals, was awarded at multiple children's, indigenous, LGBTQ+ and other film festivals around the world, and qualified for the 96th Academy Awards by winning top jury awards at the New Hampshire and Hawaii International Film Festivals.[4]
A valiant warrior, wounded in battle against foreign invaders, falls deep into a mysterious underwater world. When the octopus who rescues him transforms into a handsome young man, they fall in love and an epic adventure begins.[5]
Co-directors Hamer and Wilson, a married couple, were inspired to make the film by their belief that everybody, especially young people, deserve to see a queer love story with a happy ending.[6] The idea for the plot came to them while free-diving in the ocean near their home in Hawaiʻi.[7] The film, which has no dialogue, reflects this theme by portraying the underwater world as a place of peace and connection contrasted to the world above which is full of noise and conflict.
Co-director and animator Sousa created the animatic, designed the characters and backgrounds, and did the animation and the compositing using Adobe Animate, Photoshop, After Effects and Blender. Sousa, who previously worked with the team on their animated short Kapaemahu, approached the project from a painters perspective, using light as the motif to connect the different worlds depicted by the film.[8]
Aikāne received press attention and positive reviews in several publications including Variety, which called the film "radiant," Zippy Frames, which described it as "tender and strong," and Them, which described it as "a universal love story rooted in Native Hawaiian tradition." It was selected in film festivals around the world.
Festival / Organization | Award | Result | |
---|---|---|---|
Provincetown International Film Festival | Best Animated Short | ||
New Hampshire Film Festival | Best Animation | ||
Newport Beach Film Festival | Audience Award | ||
Hawai'i International Film Festival | Best Made in Hawai'i Short | ||
Chicago International Childrenʻs Film Festival | Embrace Award | ||
DeadCenter Film Festival | Best Pride SHort | ||
DC Asian Pacific American Film Festiv | Best Narrative Short | ||
Out at the Movies Film Festival | Best Narrative Short | ||
AmiCorti Film Festival | Best Animated Short | ||
Animotion | Best Director | ||
Virginia Queer Film Festival | Best Animated SHort | ||
Animotion | Best Director | ||
New Orleans Film Festival | Best Animated Short | ||
Iris Prize | Best Short | ||
Palm Springs International ShortFest | Best Animated Short | ||
Seattle International Film Festival | Best Animated Short | ||
Indy Shorts International Film Festival | Best Animated Short |